Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - World War Zero
Episode Date: January 3, 2022Subscribe to the podcast! https://podfollow.com/everythingeverywhere/ I’ve done many episodes talking about the first world war and I’ve done many episodes talking about the second world war. ...However, despite the names we’ve given them, they weren’t the only world wars. There was another global war that occurred well before the 20th-century wars. This war actually saw conflicts on five different continents. Learn more about world war zero, the world war before the world wars, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. https://surfshark.deals/EverythingEverywhere -------------------------------- Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/EEDailyPodcast/ Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I've done many episodes talking about the First World War, and I've done many episodes talking about
the second World War. However, despite the names we've given them, they weren't the only World Wars.
There was another global war that occurred well before the 20th century wars, and this war actually
saw conflicts on five different continents. Learn more about World War Zero, the World War before
the World Wars, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Before we get into what global conflict predated the world wars, we should talk about where
the term world war came from.
The term was first used generically in the 19th century.
The Oxford English Dictionary claims that the first use of the first use of the first time.
phrase in English came from a Scottish newspaper called the People's Journal in 1848, which wrote, quote,
A war amongst the great powers is now necessarily a world war, end quote. After that, the phrase
appeared in a rather general sense several times, including usage by Karl Marx. The 20th century
popularization of the phrase came from a German novelist by the name of August Wilhelm Otto Nyman,
who wrote a book called Der Weltkrieg, Deutsche Troima. Weltkrieg is German for World War.
And by the way, the title of the book, when translated into English, was the coming conquest of England.
The first reference to the First World War as the First World War occurred in September of 1914,
just a little over a month after the war started by German chemist Ernst Haeckel, who wrote,
quote, there is no doubt that the course and character of the feared European war will become the first world war in the full sense of the word, end quote.
In English, the term world war really wasn't used until after the conclusion of the war.
It was simply known as the Great War during its duration.
From the end of World War I through the 1920s and 1930s, there was talk of a second World War,
much like how people referenced World War III after World War II.
In the June 12, 1939 edition of Time magazine, they ran an article for the first time calling
the previous Great War, World War I, and also named the upcoming war World War II.
On September 4, 1939, after France and the UK declared war on Germany after they invaded
Poland, a Danish newspaper explicitly said on their front page, quote,
The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m.
So both of these wars were not only great wars in terms of their scale, but were also
global wars in terms of their geographic scope. During World War I, most of the fighting
took place in Europe on the Western and Eastern fronts. However, there were also battles in
the Middle East with the Ottoman Empire, as well as fighting all over Africa between
French and British colonies and German colonies in southern, eastern, eastern, and western
Africa. There were also some small skirmishes fought in Asia and the Pacific, in particular over the
German colony of Samoa and their Chinese port of Sing Tao. I'm sure most of you are very familiar
with the global nature of the Second World War, with extensive conflicts in Europe and Asia,
as well as the North African Theater, the Pacific Theater, and small incidents in northern Australia.
So basically, the numbering of world wars began in the 20th century, and it was used to reference
modern, mechanized, large-scale wars.
However, if we look at the geographic scope of conflicts, they weren't at all the first
world wars, i.e. global wars. European countries have fought each other for centuries, alternating
between enemies and allies. When they began their rush to colonize the rest of the world,
their conflicts went with them. Many times there would be skirmishes on one side of the world
that didn't have any centralized coordination because communications took so long.
However, there was one conflict in particular, which was a sustained war, which ended up being fought on five continents, lasted several years, involved many different countries, and is what some historians have called World War Zero.
This was the Seven Years' War.
I should note that World War Zero is just a numbering convention to indicate that it came before World War I and a recognition that we aren't going to rename World War I and World War II.
They're sort of like Isaac Asma's three laws of robotics.
He created them and then realized a more important fourth law, which he then dubbed the
Zero-eth Law of Robotics.
The Seven Years War, unlike other World Wars, didn't start in Europe.
It actually started in the backwaters of North America in the 18th century.
The starting point of this conflict took place on May 28, 1754 in what is today the state of
Pennsylvania.
It was there that a military force from the British Virginia colony and a group of Iroquois Indians
ambushed a group of French soldiers who were trying to establish a presence in what was called
the Ohio country. The French had previously chased away a British force that was trying to
establish a foothold in what is today the city of Pittsburgh. The small British Uruguay
force had instructions to just chase away the French. However, they ended up in a skirmish
with French forces where one British soldier was killed and as many as a dozen French soldiers
were killed. This became known as the Battle of Jumenville Glen, named after the French
commander who was killed. The entire battle lasted about 15 minutes, and there were about 40 men on the
British side and 35 and the French side. The leader of the British forces was a 22-year-old
lieutenant colonel from Virginia by the name of George Washington. Yep, that George Washington. Before he
became the father of his country, he inadvertently started a global war, something which is often
overlooked in the histories. The reason why this small battle was significant is that the British and the
French were technically at peace in this time. This began a war that most Americans know as the
French and Indian War. However, this war wasn't really a war per se, just ended up being the
North American theater in a much larger war. For years, the British and French clashed, with each
side garnering the support of various Indian tribes, who were likewise using the British and the
French to advance their own agendas against the tribes that they were feuding with. Two years after
the war broke out North America, the war between Britain and France escalated when it spread to Europe.
Prussia, led by Frederick the Great, attacked the smaller state of Saxony, which then triggered
a whole bunch of alliances, which is very reminiscent of other world wars. Saxony's main
ally was Austria, which was brought into the war, and its main ally was France. Likewise,
the Prussians then allied with the British. Sweden, Russia, and Spain joined on the side of France,
while Portugal and some smaller German states joined the side of Prussia and Britain, including
Hanover, who, if you remember, which is where the British royal family came from. In the Caribbean,
the British ended up taking Havana in a large part of the island of Cuba, as well as some
other islands in the region. In South America, Portugal and Spain fought over regions of the Amazon
which bordered their respective colonies. In India, the declining Mughal Empire allied with the French
to combat the British who were expanding their presence on the subcontinent. In Africa, the British
invaded and took over the French colony of Senegal, including the main trading base of Gory Island.
The British also occupied the main Spanish port in Asia, Manila. In the Mediterranean, the French
took over the British-controlled island of Manorca. Russia, which had been fighting the
the Prussians and was fearful of their domination of Europe, ended up switching sides in 1762 when
Zarina Elizabeth died and was replaced by her nephew, Tsar Peter III. Even without getting into all the
various battles on mainland Europe, you can clearly see that this was a truly global conflict. Almost
all of the major powers in Europe were involved, and war took place literally around the world.
The war went on, as the name would suggest, for seven years, and eventually ended in 1763. So,
what was the result of seven years of global fighting?
The main impact of the French and Indian War, North America,
was that France lost all of its colonies in North America.
Quebec and the Louisiana Territory east of the Mississippi
came under the control of the British.
All of the territory west of the Mississippi was seated to Spain.
Yes, the Louisiana Territory was Spanish,
and the French later sold it to the United States
after buying it from the Spanish and holding it for one day.
The Spanish wanted Havana and Cuba back,
so they gave it to the British in exchange for Spanish Florida and Manila,
both of which ended up back in Spanish control anyhow.
France ceded the Caribbean islands of St. Vincent, Tobago, Dominica, and Grenada to the British.
Portugal solidified its claim to much of what is today the northern and western parts of the Brazilian Amazon.
Britain took over the entire Bengal from the Mughal Empire in India.
In Europe, however, pretty much nothing changed.
The borders were basically close to what they were when everything started.
It did mark the end of France as a major colonial power, and it started the decline of Spain as a major colonial power, a process that would take a century to unwind.
It also marked the beginning of British colonial supremacy and the beginning of their dominance in India.
It also set the spark for resentment in many of the British colonists in North America, which eventually led to the American Revolutionary War.
So I don't think it's really that much of a stretch to consider the seven years war to be a world war.
It was a significant war for its time, with several hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians dying in conflicts around the world.
It was a conflict amongst the greatest colonial powers of the world.
It was fought on five continents and had ramifications that were still living with today.
To be sure, there are other conflicts that you could also define to be world wars.
The Napoleonic Wars, the conquests of the Mongolian Empire, some ancient Roman wars, and even the Bronze Age collapse have been called World Wars.
However, I don't think any of them quite stand up to the scale and scope of the Seven Years War,
a war which Winston Churchill called the First World War before the First World War.
And it was all started by a 22-year-old lieutenant colonel who would go on to do such things
that launching a global war wouldn't even rank among his most noteworthy accomplishments.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an airwave media podcast.
The associate producers are Thorpe Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Go Bears 1983 over at Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write, I love this podcast. I so appreciate the amount of work and research put into these short episodes.
They are the perfect length for me to listen to on my walk to work, and I usually end up Googling something to learn more by the end of an episode.
Thank you for the information overload you provide.
Well, thanks, Gobears, 1983.
Doing further research on my episodes is always a good idea.
I'm usually just able to scratch the surface of most topics, some of which could fill an entire book or even an entire academic career.
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